Speculatively scheduling micro-operations after allocation

ABSTRACT

Apparatus, systems and methods for speculative scheduling of uops after allocation are disclosed including an apparatus having logic to schedule a micro-operation (uop) for execution before source data of the uop is ready. The apparatus further includes logic to cancel dispatching of the uop for execution if the source data is invalid. Other implementations are disclosed.

BACKGROUND

Pipelined microprocessor architectures often employ schemes to permit anewly allocated micro-operation (“uop”) to bypass the microprocessor'sexecution scheduling logic or “reservation station” when that logic doesnot have another uop ready for scheduling. Such bypass schemes wait toschedule the uop until it can be determined whether the uop's sourcedata is valid. If the source data is valid then the bypassing schemeschedules the uop and dispatches it for execution. If the source data isinvalid then the bypassing scheme will abort scheduling of the uop andreturn the uop to the scheduling logic. However, waiting forconfirmation of the source data inserts latency or “bubbles” in thepipeline wasting valuable processor cycles between allocation of the uopand its scheduling.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute apart of this specification, illustrate one or more implementationsconsistent with the principles of the invention and, together with thedescription, explain such implementations. The drawings are notnecessarily to scale, the emphasis instead being placed uponillustrating the principles of the invention. In the drawings,

FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating portions of a processor inaccordance with some implementations of the invention;

FIG. 2 is a flow chart illustrating a process in accordance with someimplementations of the invention;

FIG. 3 illustrates a representative pipelined scheme in accordance withsome implementations of the invention;

FIGS. 4A and 4B are schematic diagrams of logic in accordance with someimplementations of the invention;

FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating a system in accordance with someimplementations of the invention; and

FIG. 6 is a block diagram illustrating another system in accordance withsome implementations of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The following description refers to the accompanying drawings. Among thevarious drawings the same reference numbers may be used to identify thesame or similar elements. While the following description provides athorough understanding of the various aspects of the claimed inventionby setting forth specific details such as particular structures,architectures, interfaces, techniques, etc., such details are providedfor purposes of explanation and should not be viewed as limiting.Moreover, those of skill in the art will, in light of the presentdisclosure, appreciate that various aspects of the invention claimed maybe practiced in other examples or implementations that depart from thesespecific details. At certain junctures in the following disclosuredescriptions of well known devices, circuits, and methods have beenomitted to avoid clouding the description of the present invention withunnecessary detail.

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of portions of a processor 100 inaccordance with some implementations of the invention. Processor 100includes a front end (FE) stage 102, an execution stage 104, memoryinterface 106, and an out-of-order (000) stage 108. 000 108 includesallocation logic (ALLOC) 110, a register alias table logic (RAT) 112,reservation station logic (RS) 114 including one or more schedulers 115,and reorder buffer (ROB)/real register file (RRF) logic 116. FE 102,execution stage 104, and memory interface 106, included in FIG. 1 in theinterests of completeness, provide functionality well known to thoseskilled in the art and thus will not be discussed in any further detail.Moreover, those skilled in the art will recognize that some processorcomponents, such as instruction/data caches, branch target buffer,instruction fetch logic, etc. have been excluded from FIG. 1 so as tonot needlessly obscure implementations of the invention.

Processor 100 may be one implementation of a Pentium® compatibleprocessor such as those produced by Intel® Corporation. However, theinvention may be practiced using other kinds of processors, such as anItanium® Processor Family compatible processor or an X-Scale® familycompatible processor. Further, processor 100 may comprise one processorcore of multi-core microprocessor. The invention is, however, notlimited to a particular processor or microprocessor architecture and maybe implemented in any pipelined processor or microprocessorarchitecture.

FE 102 may provide decoded uops to OOO 108. ALLOC 110 may operate inconjunction with RAT 112 and ROB/RRF 116 to allocate physical registryentries for the uops provided to OOO 108. While RAT 112 may rename ormap logical registers (e.g., x86 logical registers such as EAX, EBX,ECX, etc.) associated with a uop to physical registers (not shown) inROB/RRF 116, ALLOC 110 may undertake the actual allocation of thosephysical registers. ALLOC 110 may also allocate the uop to an entry inRS 114 so that scheduler 115 may schedule the uop for execution by anexecution unit (not shown) in execution stage 104. RS 114 may thendispatch the uop to stage 104 for execution. Execution of the uop mayresult in data being sourced from or stored to the physical registers inROB/RRF 116 that RAT 112 maps to.

In accordance with some implementations of the invention, a uop suppliedto OOO 108 by FE 102 may, if RS 114 does not already have a previouslyallocated uop ready for scheduling, be speculatively scheduled afterbeing allocated for execution by ALLOC 110 without waiting for anindication from ROB/RRF 116 that the source data or sources for the uopare ready or are valid. RS 114 may speculatively schedule the uop inresponse to an indicator (e.g., SpecSched) provided by ALLOC 110 andassociated with the uop.

In accordance with some implementations of the invention, RS 114 maycancel the speculative scheduling of the uop in response to one or moreindicators provided by ROB/RRF 116 and associated with operand(s) orsource(s) that the uop requires to execute. For example, ROB/RRF 116 mayprovide an indicator or signal (e.g., a negated SrceValid signal) to RS114 to indicate that the speculatively scheduled uop should not bedispatched for execution because one or more data sources are not readyor are not valid. Furthermore, if the uop is canceled then, inaccordance with some implementations of the invention, any dependentuops spawned by the speculatively scheduled uop may also be canceled.

FIG. 2 illustrates a process 200 for speculatively scheduling uops afterallocation in accordance with some implementations of the invention.While, for ease of explanation, process 200, and associated processes,may be described with regard to processor 100 of FIG. 1, the inventionis not limited in this regard and other processes or schemes supportedand/or performed by appropriate devices and/or combinations of devicesin accordance with the invention are possible.

FIG. 3 illustrates a representative pipelined scheme 300 that may beassociated with speculatively scheduling uops after allocation inaccordance with some implementations of the invention. Scheme 300,illustrating representative operations 302-308 distributed across threeprocessor pipelines 310 and over four pipeline stages 312, is providedto aid discussion of process 200 and is not intended to limit theinvention to a particular pipelined scheme. For example, as thoseskilled in the art will recognize, while scheme 300 shows four pipelinestages 312, those skilled in the art will recognize that the fourpipeline stages 312 may, in pipelined architectures employing schedulinglogic capable of dispatching uops on both rising and falling clockedges, actually represent four processor half-cycles.

Returning to FIG. 2, process 200 may begin with the register renamingand allocation of a uop for scheduling [act 202]. In someimplementations of the invention act 202 may be undertaken by ALLOC 110allocating a uop, received from FE 102, into RS 114 from RAT 112. At thesame time, RAT 112 may provide for renaming or mapping of the logicalregisters associated with the uop to the set of physical registers (notshown) associated with ROB/RRF 116. RAT 112 may also map the physicalregisters for the uop's sources or operands. In undertaking act 202, RAT112 may also provide one or more signals or indicators (e.g., SpecSched)to RS 114 indicating to RS 114 that the uop is to be speculativelyscheduled. Thus, referring to scheme 300 of FIG. 3, act 202 may resultin operation 302 occurring in stage 1.

Process 200 may continue with a determination of whether a previous uopis ready for scheduling [act 204]. In some implementations of theinvention, subsequent to receiving an indication from RAT 112 that theuop is to be speculatively scheduled, RS 114 may undertake thedetermination of act 204. Thus, if RS 114 contains a previouslyallocated uop that is ready for scheduling, then RS 114 may ignore theindication received from RAT 112 in act 202 and may not undertakespeculative scheduling of the uop. In such case, act 204 may result in apositive determination (i.e., that a previous uop is ready forscheduling) and process 200 may terminate and the uop may not bespeculatively scheduled.

If, on the other hand, it is determined, in act 204, that RS 114 doesnot have another, previously allocated, uop ready for scheduling thenprocess 200 may continue with the acts of reading the source(s) oroperand(s) for the uop [act 206] and the speculative scheduling of theuop [act 208]. In some implementations of the invention, act 206 may beundertaken by having RS 114 read the source(s) or source data associatedwith the uop from the physical registers of ROB/RRF 116 that wereallocated to the uop's sources in act 202. In some implementations ofthe invention RAT 112 may identify the physical registers allocated tothe uop's sources in act 202. The invention is, however, not limited tothe order of acts 204 and 206 as shown in FIG. 2. For example, in someimplementations of the invention act 204 (determining whether previousuop ready for scheduling) and act 206 (reading uop's sources) may beconducted in parallel. While undertaking act 206, RS 114 may alsoundertake act 208 by scheduling the uop. Thus, referring to scheme 300of FIG. 3, acts 206 and 208 may result in respective operations 303 and305 occurring in stage 2.

Process 200 may then continue with a determination of whether thesource(s) for the uop are valid [act 210]. In some implementations ofthe invention, RS 114 may undertake the determination of act 210 inresponse to one or more signals or indicators (e.g., SrcValid) providedby ROB/RRF 116. If, for example, ROB/RRF 116 indicates that data operandor source is ready or valid (e.g., by providing a SrcValid signal) thenact 210 may result in a positive determination. If, on the other hand,ROB/RRF 116 indicates that data operand or source is not ready or is notvalid (e.g., by providing a negated SrcValid signal) then act 210 mayresult in a negative determination. Those skilled in the art willrecognize that a uop may be associated with multiple data operands orsources and that, in that case, ROB/RRF 116 may provide a separateindicator or signal for each source, indicating to RS 114 whether or noteach source is ready or valid. In such implementations, thedetermination of act 210 may be undertaken in response to any one ofthose indicators or signals.

If the outcome of act 210 is positive, that is, if the source(s)associated with the uop are ready or valid, the process 200 may continuewith a dispatching of the uop [act 212] and the writing of a readystatus for the uop [act 214]. In accordance with some implementations ofthe invention, act 212 may be undertaken by RS 114 providing ordispatching the uop to execution stage 104 and act 214 may be undertakenby RS 114 writing or indicating a ready status to a register (not shown)in RS 114. Thus, referring to scheme 300 of FIG. 3, acts 212 and 214 mayresult in respective operations 306 and 304 occurring in stage 3.

If, on the other hand, the outcome of act 210 is negative, that is, ifthe source(s) associated with the uop are not ready or are not valid,the process 200 may continue with the cancellation of the uop [act 216]and the cancellation of any dependent uop(s) [act 218]. In someimplementations of the invention, act 216 may be undertaken by RS 114cancelling, in response to one or more indicators or signals provided byROB/RRF 116 in act 210, the speculative scheduling of the uop.

As those skilled in the art will recognize, if, referring also to FIG.3, the uop had been speculatively scheduled in stage 2 (operation 305)then it is possible that the uop may have spawned one or more dependentuops that scheduled in stage 3 (operation 307) or later. Thus, if thesource(s) associated with the uop are determined to be not ready or notvalid in 210, such that the speculative scheduling of the uop iscancelled in act 216 and, hence, the uop is not dispatched in stage 3(operation 306), then it may be necessary to cancel any scheduleddependent uops spawned by the uop

FIG. 4A is a schematic diagram of logic or circuitry 400 that may beused in accordance with some implementations of the invention toundertake the cancellation of the scheduling of a uop in accordance withact 216 of process 200. Logic 400 includes first AND logic 402 that andsa signal (e.g., SpecSched(0)) indicating that the uop is to bespeculatively scheduled with a signal (e.g., a negated SrcValid(0))indicating that a first source or operand associated with the uop is notready or is not valid. Logic 400 also includes second AND logic 404 thatands the signal (e.g., SpecSched(1)) indicating that the uop is to bespeculatively scheduled with a signal (e.g., a negated SrcValid(1))indicating that a second source or operand associated with the uop isnot ready or is not valid. Logic 400 further includes OR logic 406 thators together the output of AND logic 402 with the output of AND logic404 to generate a control signal (e.g., Canceluop(1)) that indicatesthat the speculative scheduling of the uop is to be cancelled. In someimplementations of the invention, logic 400 may be implemented in RS 114and/or RAT 112 although the invention is not limited in this regard.

Cancelling dependent uops may require two pieces of information: (i)detecting that a uop is dependent on another uop (parent uop) that wasspeculatively scheduled, and (ii) detecting that the parent uop wascancelled. Consumedspeculativevalid (CSV) and Consumedrealvalid (CRV)signals may provide the above pieces of information, respectively. CSVfor a source operand of a uop may be generated if the parent uopproducing that source was scheduled speculatively (based on SpecSched).CRV for a source operand of a uop may be generated if the parent uop'sspeculation was correct (based on SrcValid signals). The parentageinformation about a uop may be obtained, for example, from RAT 112,which for a given implementation may generate this information for thepurpose of standard register renaming, or can be computed by comparingthe source operand registers of the uop with the output registers ofother earlier uops. It may be appreciated by those of skill in the artthat this may be accomplished by looking at the output registers of theuops that are speculatively scheduled but for which confirmation orcancellation of their speculation has not happened yet (i.e., betweenactions 208 and 212/216).

FIG. 4B is a schematic diagram of logic or circuitry 410 that may beused in accordance with some implementations of the invention toundertake the cancellation of the scheduling of a dependent uop inaccordance with act 218 of process 200. Logic 410 includes first ANDlogic 412 that ands a signal (e.g., a negated ConsumedRealValid orCRV(0)) indicating that a first source or operand associated with thedependent uop is not ready or is not valid with a signal (e.g.,ConsumedSpeculativeValid or CSV(0)) indicating that the dependent uophas been speculatively scheduled. Logic 410 also includes second ANDlogic 414 that ands the signal (e.g., CRV(1)) indicating that a secondsource or operand associated with the dependent uop is not ready or isnot valid with a signal (e.g., a negated SrcValid(1)) indicating thatthe dependent uop has been speculatively scheduled. Logic 410 furtherincludes OR logic 416 that ors together the output of AND logic 412 withthe output of AND logic 414 to generate a control signal (e.g.,CancelDepuop(1)) that indicates that the speculative scheduling of thedependent uop is to be cancelled. In some implementations of theinvention, logic 410 may be implemented in RS 114 and/or RAT 112although the invention is not limited in this regard.

The acts shown in FIG. 2 need not be implemented in the order shown; nordo all of the acts necessarily need to be performed. Also, those actsthat are not dependent on other acts may be performed before or inparallel with the other acts. For example, act 206 may be undertaken inparallel with act 208. Similarly, acts 204 and 206 may be undertaken inparallel. Further, at least some of the acts in FIG. 2 may beimplemented as instructions, or groups of instructions, implemented in amachine-readable medium.

FIG. 5 illustrates a front-side-bus (FSB) computer system 500 that maybe used to implement the invention. System 500 includes a processor 502,a graphics/memory controller 504, memory 506 (e.g., dynamic randomaccess memory (DRAM), etc.), a display 508 (e.g., a flat panel display),an Input/Output controller 510, data storage 511 (e.g., one or more diskdrives), wireless transmitter and receiver circuitry 512, and an antenna514 (e.g., dipole antenna, narrowband Meander Line Antenna (MLA),wideband MLA, inverted “F” antenna, planar inverted “F” antenna, Goubauantenna, Patch antenna, etc.). In accordance with some implementationsof the invention, processor 502 may provide the functionality ofprocessor 100 as described in detail above. Storage 511 may store code513 where that code may include instructions that, when decoded, provideone or more uops including the uop described above with respect toprocessor 100 and/or process 200. Memory 506 may, in turn, store one ormore instructions where each of those instructions include one or moreuops.

FIG. 6 illustrates a point-to-point (PtP) computer system 600 that maybe used to implement the invention. System 600 includes at least twoprocessors 602 and 603, each one including respective processor cores604 and 605 and respective point-to-point (PtP) interfaces 606/607 and608/609. Processors 602 and 603 also include respective memory controlhubs (MCH) 610 and 611 coupling processors 602 and 603 to respectivememories 612 and 613 (e.g., DRAM). Processors 602 and 603 may exchangedata via interfaces 607 and 608. Processors 602 and 603 may alsoexchange data with a chipset 614 via respective interfaces 606 and 609coupled to respective PtP interfaces 615 and 616 in chipset 614. Chipset614 may also exchange data with high-performance graphics logic 618 viaa graphics interface 619. In accordance with implementations of theinvention, cores 604 and/or 605 may implement the functionality ofprocessor 100 as described above.

Chipset 614 may also exchange data with a bus 622 via a bus interface620 where, in various implementations, bus 622 may be a industrystandard architecture (ISA) bus or a peripheral component interconnect(PCI) bus. Various I/O devices 623 and a bus bridge 624 may be coupledto bus 622 where bus bridge 624 may permit data to be exchanged betweenbus 622 and another bus 625. Bus 625 may be, in various implementations,a small computer system interface (SCSI) bus, an integrated driveelectronics (IDE) bus, or a universal serial bus (USB) bus. AdditionalI/O devices, such as keyboard/mouse or other cursor control devices 626,audio I/O 622, communications devices 628 (e.g., modems, networkinterfaces, etc.), and data storage devices 630 (e.g., magnetic diskdrive, optical disk drive, magneto-optical disk drive, magnetic tape, ornon-volatile memory including flash memory). Storage 630 may store code631 where that code may include instructions that, when decoded, provideone or more uops including the uop described above with respect toprocessor 100 and/or process 200.

Systems 500 and/or 600 may assume a variety of physical implementations.For example, system 500 or 600 may be implemented in personal computer(PC), a networked PC, a media PC, a server computing system, a set topbox (STB), a handheld computing platform (e.g., a personal digitalassistant (PDA)), a gaming system (portable or otherwise), a 3D capablecellular telephone handset, etc. Moreover, while some components ofsystems 500 or 600 may be implemented within a single device, such as asystem-on-a-chip (SOC) integrated circuit (IC), components of systems500 or 600 may also be distributed across multiple ICs or devices. Forexample, processor 502, controllers 504/510, memory 506, circuitry 512and antenna 514 may be implemented, in part, as multiple ICs containedwithin a single computing platform, such as a media PC or a STB to namea few examples. While display 508 may also be implemented along with theother components of system 500 within a PC, STB or similar platform, itmay, alternatively, also be implemented as a distinct device coupled toa platform containing the other components of system 500.

Those skilled in the art will recognize that uops and instructions maybe used interchangeably or, alternatively, that uops may be consideredto be sub-instructions of a decoded instruction. Thus, for example, someimplementations of the invention may be performed using instructionswhile other implementations of the invention may be performed usinguops.

In accordance with some implementations of the invention as describedabove, implementations of the invention include a speculative schedulingscheme that may eliminate the latency of bypassing a reservation stationor scheduler. The speculative scheduling scheme may schedule a uop whileits sources are being read from the ROB and then may selectively cancelthe scheduling if the data in the ROB turns out to be invalid. In theevent that the data is valid the speculative scheduling scheme caneliminate the latency associated with determining whether the sourcedata is valid or not. In the event the data is invalid he speculativescheduling scheme may enforce the selective cancellation before theeffects of the speculative scheduling has propagated too far.

The foregoing description of one or more implementations consistent withthe principles of the invention provides illustration and description,but is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the scope of theinvention to the precise form disclosed. Modifications and variationsare possible in light of the above teachings or may be acquired frompractice of various implementations of the invention. Clearly, manyother implementations may be employed to provide a method, apparatusand/or system to implement speculative scheduling of uops afterallocation consistent with the claimed invention.

No element, act, or instruction used in the description of the presentapplication should be construed as critical or essential to theinvention unless explicitly described as such. Also, as used herein, thearticle “a” is intended to include one or more items. In addition, someterms used to describe some implementations of the invention, such as“operand” may be used interchangeably with “source data” in somecircumstances. Moreover, when terms such as “coupled” or “responsive”are used herein or in the claims that follow, these terms are meant tobe interpreted broadly. For example, the phrase “coupled to” may referto being communicatively, electrically and/or operatively coupled asappropriate for the context in which the phrase is used. Variations andmodifications may be made to the above-described implementation(s) ofthe claimed invention without departing substantially from the spiritand principles of the invention. All such modifications and variationsare intended to be included herein within the scope of this disclosureand protected by the following claims.

1. An apparatus, comprising: logic to speculatively schedule amicro-operation (uop) for execution before any determination of whethersource data of the uop is ready if the logic does not have a previouslyallocated uop ready for scheduling and responsive to a speculativescheduling indication for the uop received from an allocator, andwithout regard to availability of the source data, and to read thesource data in parallel with the speculative scheduling; logic todetermine whether the source data is available and if so, to dispatchthe uop to an execution stage and to write a ready status to thespeculative scheduling logic in parallel with the dispatch; and logic tocancel dispatching of the uop for execution if the source data isinvalid.
 2. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising: logic tocancel dispatching of a dependent uop for execution if the source datais invalid.
 3. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the logic to canceldispatching of a dependent uop for execution if the source data isinvalid includes AND logic responsive to first and second indicators,the first indicator to indicate that the uop has been speculativelyscheduled and corresponding to the speculative scheduling indication,the second indicator to indicate that source data associated with theuop is not valid.
 4. The apparatus of claim 3, further comprising: aregister alias table to provide the first indicator; and a reorderbuffer to provide the second indicator.
 5. The apparatus of claim 3,wherein the logic to cancel dispatching of a dependent uop for executionif the source data is invalid includes additional AND logic responsiveto the first indicator and to a third indicator, the third indicator toindicate that additional source data associated with the uop is notvalid.
 6. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising: the allocator togenerate the speculative scheduling indication; and a reservationstation to receive the speculative scheduling indication from theallocator and to determine whether the previously allocated uop is readyfor scheduling.
 7. The apparatus of claim 6, further comprising areorder buffer/register file coupled to the ready status, wherein thereservation station is to speculatively schedule the uop without waitingfor an indication from the reorder buffer/register file as to the sourcedata.
 8. A system, comprising: memory to store an instruction, theinstruction including a micro-operation (uop); and a processor includinglogic to schedule a micro-operation (uop) for execution before receivingconfirmation of the validity of source data associated with the uop andwithout regard to availability of the source data, and to read thesource data in parallel with the speculative scheduling, if the logicdoes not have a previously allocated uop ready for scheduling andresponsive to a speculative scheduling indication for the uop, logic todetermine whether the source data is available and if so, to dispatchthe uop to an execution stage and to write a ready status to thespeculative scheduling logic in parallel with the dispatch, theprocessor further including logic to cancel dispatching of the uop forexecution if the source data is invalid.
 9. The system of claim 8,wherein the processor further includes logic to cancel dispatching of adependent uop for execution if the source data is invalid.
 10. Thesystem of claim 9, wherein the logic to cancel dispatching of adependent uop for execution if the source data is invalid includes ANDlogic responsive to first and second indicators, the first indicator toindicate that the uop has been speculatively scheduled and correspondingto the speculative scheduling indication, the second indicator toindicate that source data associated with the uop is not valid.
 11. Thesystem of claim 10, wherein the processor further includes: a registeralias table to provide the first indicator; and a reorder buffer toprovide the second indicator.
 12. The system of claim 9, wherein thelogic to cancel dispatching of a dependent uop for execution if thesource data is invalid includes additional AND logic responsive to thefirst indicator and to a third indicator, the third indicator toindicate that additional source data associated with the uop is notvalid.
 13. A method comprising: allocating a uop for scheduling;scheduling the uop for execution regardless of when source dataassociated with the uop may become available responsive to an indicationreceived in a scheduler from an allocator that the uop is to bespeculatively scheduled and if no previously allocated uops in thescheduler are ready for scheduling, and to read the source data inparallel with the speculative scheduling; determining whether the sourcedata is available and if so, to dispatch the uop to an execution stageand to write a ready status to the scheduler in parallel with thedispatch; and canceling the uop before execution if the source dataassociated with the uop is not available.
 14. The method of claim 13,further comprising: cancelling a dependent uop before execution if thesource data associated with the uop is not available.
 15. The method ofclaim 14, wherein cancelling a dependent uop before execution if thesource data associated with the uop is not available includes cancelingthe dependent uop before execution in response to first and secondindicators, the first indicator to indicate that the uop has beenspeculatively scheduled, the second indicator to indicate that sourcedata associated with the uop is not valid.
 16. An apparatus comprising:a processor including: a front end stage to generate decodedmicro-operations (uops); an out-of order stage coupled to the front endstage to receive a first uop and allocate the first uop for schedulingincluding provision of a speculative scheduling indication associatedwith the first uop, responsive to the speculative scheduling indicationto determine whether a previous uop is ready for scheduling and if so toterminate speculative scheduling of the first uop, and otherwise tospeculatively schedule the first uop regardless of when source data forthe first uop may become available, to read the source data in parallelwith the speculative scheduling, dispatch the first uop to an executionstage in parallel with writing a ready status, and to subsequentlycancel the first uop if the source data is not available or valid; andthe execution stage to execute the first uop dispatched from theout-of-order stage.
 17. The apparatus of claim 16, wherein the first uopis to be speculatively scheduled if a reservation station of theout-of-order stage does not have the previous uop.
 18. The apparatus ofclaim 16, wherein the out-of-order stage is to cancel at least onedependent uop when the first uop is cancelled.